Re: HP dm1z Ralink 5390 driver problems

Sorry, I don't seem to be having any issues like you are having. My wireless connection has been pretty stable. I am not even sure if the type of data being sent over the link will necessarily have an impact on your connection dropping or not.

The only thing I could suggest is that you try these applications when you are right next to your wireless router and see if it's a reception problem. The lower the signal the laptop receives, the slower the data rate that the wifi will transmit at. For data intensive applications, this may cause the connectivity issues you are experiencing.

Note that for the last command above I used the option <uname -r>. This will copy the files to the current running kernel version. Make sure you are running the kernel that you wish to get the wireless running on...

Now edit /etc/modules to add the line 'rt5390sta' at the end

Then run:

PHP Code:

sudo depmod -a
reboot

That should get you on your way. Hopefully that I didn't add in any typos myself.

One minor hiccup there bud! there is no need for the sudo make install, its fine without that. make install will just do the rest of the steps but instead do it with rt2860sta.dat. Rest is fine, I got my wifi working thanx to you! and downloading the kde-config-touchpad from synaptic for proper touchpad support!

Re: HP dm1z Ralink 5390 driver problems

The official Linux 3.0 kernel has been released. According to the driver changelog, the RT53xx wireless cards should be enabled by default. However, the DM1z has a type RT5390f version that has not been enabled in the release candidates. I gave up waiting and went back to Maverick with the patches, but can someone check if the stock 3.0 kernel has the wireless drivers enabled by default now?

Re: HP dm1z Ralink 5390 driver problems

Hi to all,

I am still having problems. I have a dm1-3210us, with the 539f card as shown by lspci. I installed Ubuntu amd64 11.04, and the Ralink 2.4.0.4 driver with the openSUSE patches (including the amd64 gcc warning). Everything compiles nicely, but when mounting the rt5390sta module, it complains:

Re: HP dm1z Ralink 5390 driver problems

Originally Posted by devguy

The official Linux 3.0 kernel has been released. According to the driver changelog, the RT53xx wireless cards should be enabled by default. However, the DM1z has a type RT5390f version that has not been enabled in the release candidates. I gave up waiting and went back to Maverick with the patches, but can someone check if the stock 3.0 kernel has the wireless drivers enabled by default now?

Hello, I'm using this card on my HP DM1Z 3130 and I just had to add the correct pciid in the kernel sources. I checked and it is included in 3.0.1, not before.
This compile a module called rt2800pci which works just fine (and has been since kernel 2.6.39) for me.
in the file /usr/src/linux/drivers/net/wireless/rt2x00/rt2800pci.c , find the PCI_DEVICE(0x1814 , 0x5390) line and either duplicate it and change to 539f or change directly without duplicating.
Then, compile kernel (and activate experimental drivers for 5390 cards), and you're done.

Re: HP dm1z Ralink 5390 driver problems

Hi all, just wanted to let you know that the latest mainline kernel 3.1 rc3 (search for mainline kernel ppa) has the wireless working right out of the box. Kubuntu 11.10 alpha 3 on the otherhand has issues with it that causes the kdeinit4 to crash on startup. Note that Kubuntu 11.10 alpha 3 actually comes with kernel 3.0.0.9 I think. You would need to download the mainline kernel 3.1 from the mainline kernel ppa (google "mainline kernel ppa" to find it).

What I was finally able to figure out is that if you install the alpha release of Kubuntu 11.10 rc3, install the latest 3.1 mainline kernel, and then go into synaptic and select "Mark all Updates" and let it do it's thing. After all of the updating is done, reboot the system. This time, you shouldn't get a popup crash notification for kdeinit4 when you log in. However, you may get a crash notification in the system tray but you should be able to ignore it.

Now, click on the network manager icon in the system tray. You may get a message along the lines of "We need NetworkManger verision...". Click on the wireless adapter just above the message and it should now show all of the access points available. Click on the one you want, enter your creditionals and you should be good to go.

It is nice to see that progress has been made in getting this open source driver into the kernel. I haven't tested the functionality much but I am writing this post from the connection.